Volume 53, Issue 12: January 17, 1973 North Park Press

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THE
COVOLUME 53, NUMBER 12
NORTH PARK NORTH PARK COLLEGE LIBRARY ege news WEDNESDAY JANUARY 17 1973 CHICAGO ILLINOIS
A Resolution:
"We Are Morally
Against This"
by Steve Carr
Last week's Student Senate meetings, scheduled to discuss
the Honeywell Resolution and Mandate, drew a crowd of thirty
people, most of whom dispersed after that controversial bill
was dealt with.
The Resolution "condemns Honeywell, Inc., for gross acts
of corporate irresponsibility in its continued production of
barbaric anti-personnel weapons that are responsible for ever
increasing numbers of civilian casualties in South East Asia."
The Mandate said the SA would try to obtain the right to
Proxy for the school's 250 shares of stock, or buy a share
itself, to appear at a spring Minneapolis stockholders' meeting
and vote against the production of anti-personnel weapons.
Vice-President Lavieri told how he phoned Honeywell,
Where various communicants either denied or evaded whether
Honeywell still made these weapons. An anti-personnel bomb
is typically a canister that contains metal or plastic pellets. The
plastic pellets, when imbedded in the human body, can be
discovered only through expensive sonar-wave equipment;
they are also extremely difficult to remove surgically. "The
only purpose of this bomb is to be used against people,"
Lavieri told the Senate.
A variety of opinions about the Resolution were stated by
the Senators and the gallery, the latter breaking into applause
several times when anti-war sentiments were expressed.
One person questioned if the Senate should represent the
Political views of the studentry. Senator Scott Baltic said this
was a moral issue, not a political one: "We are morally against
this."
Do you want to be morally represented by the Senate? The
questioner asked his fellow gallery-members. "Yes, I want to
be morally represented," Tom Jacobs replied. He voted for SA
Officials precisely because he did not have the time for SA
Work and wanted able people to represent his views.
Some people felt the measure would be futile or it was
unfair to pick only on Honeywell. Senator Jarvis said that
attacking Honeywell was "going against the entire corporate
System of America."
"I don't feel a bit sorry for 'em," Tom Jacobs opined,
maintaining the peace movement should select targets as
Cesar Chavez had done in the labor movement.
One Senator, Charles Hoppe, had obviously not done his
home-work. Absent from the last Senate meeting, he asked a
number of questions that had been answered then: What is a
CBU (cluster bomb unit)? Does Honeywell have to place this
O n the voting agenda (It is already on.)? Why Honeywell, how
IS it connected with North Park (Honeywell is the only
Company that makes bobms from beginning to end.)?
When the final vote came, though, only Dwight, Nelson,
Jarvis, and Forsgren's proxy voted against the Mandate. The
Other Senators voted aye. A short burst of applause from the
audience greeted the vote.
The next bill on the agenda was the establishment of a trust
and scholarship fund. This would buy a stock portfolio, to be
Managed by the school's investment brokerage, from surplus
SA funds. The dividends would establish a scholarship for a
student from one of the Covenant Children's Homes.
There were some objections to this plan. SA Treasurer Dave
Dwight noted it could take ten or fifteen years on a blue-chip
stock to get sizeable returns. Bruce Newman felt it made more
ense to simply appropriate surplus money for the scholarship,
instead of tying up the funds of future SAs. The Senate
agreed, and killed the stock proposal.
The final bill was introduced by off-campus Senator Hoppe.
It suggested moving the evening Senate meetings to the
Morning.
Although it was an admitted inconvenience for off-campus
Senators to come to campus in the evenings, part of the bill's
Purpose was to "enhance the prospect of having more
,tudents turn out at the meetings." Senator Liljegren said
lack of interest," not time scheduling, was the problem there.
Vice-President Lavieri also remarked that the executive
Committee had explored time change possibilities, but there
Were too many class conflicts to allow them. (Lavieri is also
off-campus.)
The vote came. Pearson and Phillips abstained, and Baltic,
Hoppe, and Forsgren's proxy were in favor, but the nine nays
had it.
A Festival
of Faith
Next Monday, January 22,
marks the beginning of the
1973 Festival of Faith at
North Park College. The
Festival will center around
the theme, "Race, Religion,
and Other Relevancies,"
suggested by the Rev. James
Forbes, who is to be the chief
resource person for the week.
He and the five additional
resource persons who have
been invited to participate
will center their considera-tions
around two more
specific topics, "The Christ-ian
Attitude towards the
Racial Crisis," and "The
Ministry of the Holy Spirit."
"We have sensed an
interest in both these areas
on the part of the students
and faculty, and we will try to
talk about them both this
week," Chaplain Halleen
remarked about the topics
chosen. • • • We have
invited the other resource
persons on the basis of their
known interest or work in
these areas of study."
They are the Rev. misters
Ron Behm, Douglas Cedar-leaf,
Randolph Klassen, and
Dan Simmons. It is hoped
that a memeber of the
Fellowship of Christian Ath-letes
will also be able to take
part.
A special feature of this
year's Festival is the presence
of two members of the
touring company of the
Metropolitan Opera Com-pany,
Mr. Chris Lacona,
tenor, and Ms. Carole Powell,
soprano. They sing not only
operatic repertory, but orato-rio
and musical comedy, and
will present all three during
the week, in addition to
working with the opera
workshop and voice classes.
Special Bag Lunch Con-certs
on Tuesday and
Thursday are also planned.
They will be held in H-23 at
11:30, and there will be free
.bag lunches provided for all
on- or off-campus students
who attend.
The daily schedule during
Festival of Faith Week will
include 7:00 Bible Study
Breakfasts led by the team
members, Forums at 10:10
a.m. in the Gym Lounge, 10
p.m. discussions in the
Coffee House, and a series of
workshops at 3 p.m. led daily
by different team members.
Topics include "White Christ-ians
and Black Awareness"
(Ron Behm), "On Being
Creative Christians" (Randy
Klassen), "Christian Con-science
Today" (Doug Cedar-leaf),
and "Gifts of the Spirit"
(Randy Klassen and Dan
Simmons). Evening meetings
Monday, Wednesday, and
Thursday at 8:15 will have as
speaker the Rev. Forbes.
Mr. Forbes, a black
Pentecostal minister from
Richmond, Virginia, may be
(Cont'd. on page 4)
The Chamber Singers and their string accompaniment made a number of
appearances this year. One of them was at the school musicale, held Friday,
January 12.
Come To Alumni Day
North Park College's Alumni Association is inviting alumni,
friends, parents, students — everyone — to come to Alumni
Day on Saturday, January 20.
Besides eight mini-classes, many of them taught by
members of the college faculty, there will be periods for
socializing during the day, including the annual dinner at 5:30
p.m. with entertainment provided by two musical alumni
groups and a campus humorist.
The mini-classes are:
At 10:15 a.m. and 2:15 p.m., Mr. Athnos illuminates the
artistic and religious aspects of the work of Bach; Prof.
Hawkinson discusses "Mr. Kissinger's New Balance of
Power"; Mrs. Tinzmann bases a discussion on the book I'm
O.K., You're O.K.; and Dr. Philip Anderson, director of medical
education at Swedish Covenant Hospital, and Dr. Earl
Dahlstrom of the Seminary, will explore "Ethical Questions in
the Practice of Modern Medicine."
At 11:15 a.m. and 3:15 p.m. Dr. Edgren ponders "The Novel
and Film — Peril and Promise"; Lars-Birger Sponberg lectures
on painting, "All is Vanity — Religion and Art"; Craig Stewart
asks, "Exit Pollyanna, Enter Playmates — A Trend Toward
Pornography?"; and Mr. Wettersten discusses "The New
Archeology in Southern Illinois."
There is no charge for the classes. They will probably be
presented in Carlson Tower.
What else is happening for campus visitors? Coffee hour
and registration at 9:30 a.m. in the Campus Center; a 12;30
luncheon in the dining hall; an informal get-together in the
Campus Center lounge at 4:30; and the Alumni-sponsored
buffet dinner with entertainment at 5:30.
The day's schedule will conclude with a CCIW game
between North Park and Millikin University at 8:00 p.m. in the
gymnasium.
The North Park Wind Ensemble gets in its licks.
Page 2 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 17, 1973
New Films Scheduled
A new film series has been
slated to replace the series of
oldies — but goodies which
have been shown on campus
this year. The first attraction
in the new series comes this
weekend, January 19 and 20.
It is The Cheyenne Social
Club, a wild-west comedy
starring James Stewart as an
itinerant cowboy who has
just fallen heir to what he at
first thinks is a boarding
house, run by Shirley Jones.
He and his sidekick, Henry
Fonda, soon realize, however,
that what they thought was a
They make their own laws at "The Cheyenne Social Club"
ISTIONALSEIERAL MCIIP1S MINTS
JAMS STEWART
HENRY FONDA
THE CHEYENNE SOCIAL CWB
. . WHERE THE WEST WAS REALLY MADE ,
SHIRLEY JONES
SUE AM LANGDON
(Igadcpi ricsmikw,PAIMIONe
Fine Arts Commission Explodes
Well! I send in my tearful
resignation, and not a soul
whimpers. They accepted it
without a howdy-do. Thus I
have but one alternative to
soothe my feelings, and that
is to return! Yes indeed, this
is my Big Comeback. . .
Do you have any New
Year's resolutions? You must
know by now that one of
mine is: to become even
more indispensable. But there
are others, oh yes. For
example: Spread cheer with
the beer, or, if you must
drink, don't be a bum about
it, smile and be thankful that
you are all off-campus.
There is much happening
about town at the beginning
of the new year, observe: The
Old Town School of Folk
Music began a new series of
guitar and banjo classes and
various workshops the weejk
of the 2nd. Classes are
Monday thru Thursday eve-nings,
8-10:30 p.m., and
Saturdays from 1:30-4 p.m. If
you are meagrely interested
in such activities, why not
belatedly partake of the
festivities? Contact Gail Fors-
Sweden Shop
3313 Foster Ave.
IR 8-0327
Gifts and Cards
from Scandinavia
Mon./Thurs. 9:30-9
Other days 9:30-6
We pack, wrap, and mail
berg at the school, 525-7472,
for information and a
brochure. OK?
The Gallery Ensemble of
talented jazz musicians will
hold forth beginning at 9 p.m.
on Fridays, Saturdays, and
Sundays during the month of
January at the Afram Gallery
and Studio, 1037 East 75th
Street. For the past few years
the Ensemble has been
providing some of the city's
most innovative jazz at their
weekend sessions at the
Gallery. This January series is
called "Sudden Death" and
promises to be a spectacular
of the creative jazz scene.
With the Ensemble is poetry
read by contemporary poets
in the midst of a new art
display by local artists. To
visit this set is worth the trip,
the music is varied and "quite
mellow," as they say. A small
donation is asked at the door,
and coffee and fruit juice will
boarding house is a social
center of another kind.
Other features coming
soon are, A Man Called
Horse, with Richard Harris
and Dame Judith Anderson,
a one-night showing on
February 16; April Fools, a
comedy starring Jack Lem -
mon, on March 10; One Day
in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
on May 4; and, on May 12,
They Shoot Horses, Don't
They?
These films are current,
often critically acclaimed, and
very expensive to rent, as
high as $250 per showing for
some. Please consider these
films when planning your
weekends, because without
adequate attendance, losses
will cause cancellation of the
series.
0.111"Nk,s,
c
be available; any thing else,
bring your own.
At the Auditorium of
Northeastern University, the
National Theatre of the Deaf
is presenting "Gilgamesh,"
its production with an all new
program adapted and direct-ed
by Larry Arrick. Two-thirds
god and one-third man,
Gilgamesh defies his destiny
to quest after immortality;
this fantastic epic pre-dates
Homer by 1500 years and is
produced by these unusually
gifted and determined artists
in a powerful, provocative
and humorous interpretation.
-2cowNintharukee
Ate NosTa / smEandSCICC7704 / *
c * * cp Y 0 -j, 0
C)0 * 04/ *4j N/,- "1"1(-% * 4) 2
Walt Macuda
Politics Under
Glass
Convention '73 is nearly upon us but the backstage
machinations and maneuvers that were present last year are
noticeably absent this time around.
Last year, with three weeks left before the convention,
people had a pretty good idea of who was in the running for
the presidential nomination. Both John Liljegren and Ralph
Lavieri were openly active candidates with delegations forming
in their support. The "non-campaigner" Pete Heintzelman
went into the convention without any committeed delegations
yet at its finish, would up with the second highest vote total
and eventually went on with Lavieri to win the election over
the charismatic Liljegren.
There is a curse on this campus that goes, "He who admits
to desiring the presidency is bound to lose." More than one
person has started his campaign for the presidency the day he
set foot on the campus. Without exception their plans have
fallen by the wayside. Liljegren and Jim Ahlberg, who lost the
1971 election to Joyce Nelson, are the two most recent victims
of the curse.
This year's campus politicians are keeping their plans to
themselves. No one is willing to admit that he or she is
interested in the office of SA president.
But the reliable campus grapevine has come up with some
names of people who could be considered for the office. The
vine says that Liljegren may try again, denials notwithstanding.
Junior class senator Dave Pearson has also been mentioned.
But when asked about the possibility Pearson replied, "I don't
think I want to do it. I could do the job, but I don't think being
able is enough."
Social Services Commission co-chairman Mike Voight has
been rumored to be interested. When asked about the
presidency he answered, "I haven't made up my mind yet."
The list of hopefuls includes senators Lisa Bringerud, Chuck
Hoppe and Scott Baltic. Even Chief Justice Dave Danielson's
name has been bandied about.
But who is really running this year? For the campus
politicians, mum's the word.
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Student admission I believe is
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but a phone call away:
JU3-4050, ext. 501.
I believe this is all for
today, children, see you.
Joan Hanke
FREE
CHECKING
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North Park College
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Students, Faculty,
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Wednesday, January 17, 1973 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 3
Straight from The Shoulder:
"No Love Without
Understanding"
I wanted to write about football, to say a few light things
about attitudes toward the game and so on. But I can't. I
spent my Christmas at the point of nausea, in a sick, frustrated
rage that I haven't shaken off yet.
You see, while you and I were tearing red and gold ribbon
bows off expensive boxes, while we stood in our pews belting
out "Come All Ye Faithful," other things were happening.
Across the international dateline, where today is tomorrow,
children were. . . and are. . . dying. Not from hunger or
disease. . . acts of God, some call them. . . but from crushed
skulls, mangled limbs, and pierced vital organs. All last week,
while we skied, shopped downtown, and visited with friends,
other Lutherans, Presbyterians, Baptists and Methodists were
riding in the sky, dealing death. A fuzzy-cheeked lieutenant
thumbed a toggle switch that salvoed thirty thousand pounds
of steel-cased TNT onto the head of people in a city very
much like your own. Three hours later, he and his colleagues
would sing "Oh Little Town of Bethlehem" together, and think
of home and of God. Supposedly, the same God you and I
believe in. And even as you read these words, all this is
continuing, let us make that perfectly clear.
Why? Because of one man, who has never publicly said he
was wrong about anything. One man, born of the meekest and
mildest sect of the Christian community, who harbors within
himself and enmity so vicious and so blind that he does not
recoil or weep at the photograph of a little girl running down a
street, her flesh in shreds, her clothing aflame, the handiwork
of Americans.
Nixon is not entirely alone. He shares with his predecessor,
some of his generals, and some in the public, that perverted,
virility-doubting concept of manhood that propels the
Napoleons, George Pattons and John Waynes of the world.
But Nixon alone is the present epitome of this sickness. His
"Christmas present" to the world does not represent the
wishes of those forty percent of Americans who opposed him,
nor even of the vast majority of those who supported him —
their sons also continue to become pointless statistics. No, the
Christmas bombs represent only the twisted, ill-conceived
values of this one man with near-absolute power, and that
minority as dehumanized as he.
So what? How does all this affect you and I? Why in the
College News?
Well, if American extermination-bombing mixed with
Christmas carols doesn't sicken you, then you'd better believe
in God, because you're beyond any help except His. What can
you and I do, as Christians? First, you can carry the shameful
memory of Christmas 1972 in your heart always, wherever you
go, whatever you do. You can learn; for there is no love
without understanding.
It may well be, as my brother Steve Carr has written, that
there is something better than politics. Perhaps it is true that,
as someone wrote, "Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet
they grind exceedingly small." If so, Nixon and his ilk will have
their reward. But we are here, now, and politics will dictate
peace or war, life or death, for a long, long time to come. So,
take a history course, a political science course, a foreign
language or culture course, especially if you don't have to.
Study sociology and religion, even if you're an atheist.
Recognize the destructive power of any idea or belief that is
allowed to go unchallenged, unexamined. Know that any
conviction which calls for the deaths of human beings has no
identification with Jesus of Nazareth.
Go out into the world, armed as a nurse, teacher, doctor,
administrator or whatever, and if you live to be a hundred,
reflect back upon the obscenity that was Christmas, 1972, and
show men that this was not Christianity. Show them that this
was not America.
Tom Jacobs
coellege news
Published seven times a term during the school year at North Park
College, Foster and Kedzie, Chicago, Illinois 60625. Telephone num-bers
JU 8-7926 or JU 3-2750.
Signed articles indicate the opinions of their authors and do not
necessarily reflect the opinions of THE COLLEGE NEWS of North
Park College.
EDITORS: Steve Carr, Walt Macuda
NEWS EDITOR: Kris Ness
BUSINESS MANAGER: Tom Vikander
SPORTS EDITOR: Owen Youngman
SPORTS STAFF: Gordon Edes, Dave. Larson, Larry Swanson
ILLUSTRATOR: Joan Hanke
PHOTOGRAPHERS - Ann Anderson, Harry Christenson, Larry Foss,
Burt P. Johnson, Bruce Newman
FACULTY ADVISOR :Vernon VVettersten
Staff writers are considered contributing editorialists or reporters
Printed by SON'S TYPOGRAPHIC SERVICE, 7504 Churchill,
Morton Grove, Illinois 60053, (312) 966-4111.
Freedom . .
Freedom of the press.
The phrase is so trite, the concept so
hallowed.
Is it in danger?
If you think Presidential influence on Public
Broadcasting Corporation programming, the
jailing of reporters who refuse to expose their
sources, and news black-outs on American
journalists in South East Asia are dangerous,
then yes.
Maybe you don't care. If you want to be an
insurance salesman, or a taxi-cab driver, or a
housewife, it may not affect you that much.
But if you want to be a teacher, or a
student, or a pastor, or a writer, then you
should be concerned.
Not only about the press, but about civil
liberties in general.
I don't believe that fascists are attempting
to stifle all dissent in the country, that
politicos are trying to turn us all into mindless
robots, or even that such a movement could
b e successful. American is so large, there is
always an outpost of sanity somewhere inside
it.
I do believe that fascists with the power
and the will can do a lot of damage.
Some of that damage has already been
done.
Freedom of the press.
Freedom to do what?
Yes, it is often prejudiced. Richard Nixon to
the contrary, though, it is often prejudiced in
favor of the administration. Neither the
nation's publishers (who are overwhelmingly
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Republican) nor the nation's reporters and
columnists (who tend to be Democrats or
Independents) spared the foibles of George
McGovern in the last election. The liberal
press scarcely gave George and easier go of it
than it gave Tricky.
Yes, the press often errs. The failure of The
New York Times to publish its knowledge of
the coming Bay of Pigs invasion is a famous
instance of that.
Personally, I think the press has been giving
the government a soft time of it, compared to
what the government deserves.
That doesn't mean all reporters should be
Mike Roykos.
But all the errors and incompetencies are
balanced by the immense amount of good
any city newspaper can do.
If the Chicago dailies are found making
sweetheart deals with Mayor Daley, they are
also found exposing waste and corruption in
government.
The test of a newspaper is in its news
sections. That's where the freedom of the
press really matters. The editorial comment
on the Pentagon Papers wasn't nearly as
important as the publication of those Papers
on page one. This is a good instance of news
that verges on editorial, but is significant as
news.
The freedom of the press.
So long as we've got the latter, we need
the former.
Shafer Florists
Corner
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10% disCount to all North
Park Students and Faculty
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Page 4 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 17, 1973
News Briefs
CVA Weekend
Remember when a winter weekend cost $16—$20, back in
your high school days? Well, for $9.50, Covenant Young
Adults is sponsoring a weekend on January 19 and 20 at
Covenant Harbor, in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. There will be
lots of fellowship, outdoor and indoor recreation (including ice
skating and tobogganing and volleyball, etc.), and as a special
feature, a square dance Saturday night.
We'll leave this Friday afternoon and return late Saturday
night, so . . How about a weekend off campus, out of
Chicago? Contact Jan Graham in Anderson Hall. The decision
to attend may be made as late as Friday morning.
Deadline
Applications for the Student Missionary Project must be
received by the Chaplain's Office before January 20th.
Students desiring to serve as short term missionaries for next
summer or the following year can obtain an application form
from Chaplain Halleen or his secretary. Previous student
missionaries have been sent to Ecuador, Japan, Zaire, Alaska,
and the Mountain Mission in Virginia.
Dr. Gustafson To Speak
Dr. James M. Gustafson will appear in the Distinguished
Visiting Alumni Scholars program on Thursday, February 8,
and Friday, February 9.
Dr. Gustafson, professor at the Divinity School of the
University of Chicago, has been called "one of the nation's
foremost experts in theological and social ethics." He will
begin his two day visit with a public lecture on Thursday
evening at 8:15, in L-1. On Friday morning, at 9:15, he will
address a College Convocation, using the topic "Moral and
Religious Implications of the New Genetics." Discussion
(informal!) will follow, then Dr. Gustafson will lecture in a
philosophy class, and share in an informal luncheon to which
religion and a panel discussxion in Nyvall Lounge at 2:15
Friday. An interdisciplinary panel of faculty members will
participate, with Dr. Gustafson as responder and reactor.
Kurt's Beauty Salon
(formerly Mr. Marty 's Coiffures)
.3244 W. Foster, Chicago 5:349100
Special Price for North Park Students
$ .50 off regular hairset price,
$1.00 off any v,.3:1: over $4.00
WITH NOR1H PARK ID
Tuesday---,aturday 9-5
Thursday and Fridav erening,s till 7 Pil
Meet your
first tape deck:
The choir, chorus, and wind ensemble, with conductor David Thorburn, in the finale of the campus musicale.
NP Forms Orchestra
The lack of a campus
orchestra to acquaint both
string and wind players with
orchestral literature and to
provide them with the
opportunity to work with the
other has been one of the
few holes in the North Park
music department over the
past few years.
But now, even that one
oversight has been corrected.
The College Orchestra, under
the direction of College Choir
conductor David L. Thorburn,
held its first rehearsal this
past Monday night and will
continue to rehearse every
Monday from here on in.
"Our main function,"
Thorburn said, "will be to
explore that orchestral litera-ture
which we find within our
grasp. Another function will
be to accompany other
campus musical groups for
major performances."
Ideally, said Thorburn, the
group will eventually have
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from 60-70 members; but for
right now, the conductor
considers procuring 50 play-ers
a "smashing success."
As of now, viola players
and cellists are in short
supply and the search is still
on to obtain several more.
Eleven violins of what will
hopefully be a 16-member
section are currently enrolled,
and a pair of contrabassists
are also on the roster.
The music currently listed
as among those hoped to be
in the repertoiie includes
Mozart's "Eine Kleine Nacht-musik"
for strings; a
symphony by Gluck; Schu-bert's
"Unfinished Sympho-ny"
and Brahms' 4th in e
minor; and contemporary
pieces by Hindemith and
Copland.
Festival of Faith Nears
(Cont'd. from page 1)
familiar to some students, as
he was the speaker at the
CYA annual meeting held at
Edgebrook Covenant Church
two years ago. Three of the
other resource persons are
Covenant pastors (Doug
Cedarleaf, Rochester, MMN;
Randy Klassen, Prairie Vil-lage,
KS — an artist, and
member of NP's Board of
Directors; and Dan Simmons,
Missoula, MT), and one, Ron
Merle Norman
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Make your appointment for a
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Behm, is the white pastor of
a black Congregational
church on the South Side.
He is also co-author of the
book, Your God Is Too
White. All members of the
team were invited separately,
and will be working together
for the first time.
"These men have indicated
areas in which they would
feel qualified to participate in
class discussions," said
Chaplain Halleen this week.
"We are hoping people will
invite them into their
classrooms." These discus-sions
would be of a
somewhat specific nature,
with the resource person and
class confronting the problem
of making Christianity re-levant
in their own particular
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Wednesday, January 17, 1973 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 5
News
Brief
Applications for director of
the 1973 Homecoming should
be turned in by January 21.
The applications can be
submitted to Jim Oberg or
Mark Liljedahl in Burgh Hall,
and Candy Wickstrom in the
Commission Chairmen's of-fice
in the campus center.
The applications are avail-able
at the Campus Center
desk and in Carlson Towers.
This Week
In Sports
TONIGHT
Basketball
North Park at III. Wesleyan
Swimming
Rockford at North Park
Wrestling
Vikes Win Three at Home
Going into last Saturday's all-important clash at Augustana,
the basketball Vikings of Dan McCarrell had pushed their
record to 10-3 for the year and 3-1 in the CCIW with several
generally impressive showings.
The league wins were both played in the friendly confines of
the North Park gym. On Jan. 5, the Vikings survived a late
Wheaton rally to hang on and beat their arch -foes by a 74-67
count; and five days later, they pulverized Carthage 92-57.
The North Parkers came up with an even split in
non-conference games over the Christmas recess, beating the
College of Racine in another home contest, 80-59, and
dropping two of three on their California road trip (see
accompanying story).
The game with Racine, a last-minute warmup for the
Western swing, was like two games in itself. The visitors held
the upper hand by one point at halftime, 37-36, and if it hadn't
been for Keith McDonald's 15 points before intermission the
Racine boys would have run off and hid.
But McCarrell apparently stirred up the troops between
halves, since they came out and blew their opponents off by a
44-22 count in the second stanza. McDonald ended up as the
game's high scorer with 27; Gene Profit had 15, and big Jim
Campbell contributed 11 markers and 15 rebounds.
The first game of the new year was against Wheaton, and
the Vikings reversed the form of the Racine game in this one.
After moving out to a 40-29 lead at the half, sloppy play in the
North Park at Elmhurst
FRIDAY
Wrestling
North Park at MacMurray In-vitational
SATURDAY
Basketball
Millikin at North Park
Wrestling
North Park at MacMurray In-vitational
Swimming
Chicago Circle at North Park
TUESDAY
Basketball
Augustana at North Park
Swimming
North Park at George Williams
West Coast Trip
Hard on Cagers
This year's Christmas
basketball trip took the North
Park cagers to California to
take on some of the West
Coast's tougher quintets. The
Vikings concluded the three-game
swing with one win
and two defeats and third
place in the Westmont
Winter Classic in Santa
Barbara.
NPC opened with a game
against a major-college team,
the University of California at
Irvine. Poor shooting in the
first half lead to a 44-23 NPC
deficit at halftime, and a
Jayvees Still Searching
For Another Victory
by Gordon Edes
Victory continues to elude
the slump-ridden NPC junior
varsity Vikings. Despite oc-casional
spurts of fluid
five-man work, the yearling
Vikes dropped three league
decisions to Wheaton, Cart-hage,
and Augustana.
Not since the opening
Weeks of the season have
first-year coach Bill Knuckles'
Squad savored a much-need-ed
win.
Arch-rival Wheaton totally
dominated play in their
encounter with the home
representatives, outplaying
North Park at both ends of
the court en route to victory.
With Matt Parker respond-ing
with one of his finer
outputs of the season, NP
battled Carthage on virtually
even terms in the first half,
and appeared in command at
the outset of the second half.
But with sharpshooting
backcourt man Jim Williams
confined to the bench
because of foul trouble,
Carthage surged ahead with
the use of a devastatingly
effective fullcourt zone press.
What had been a tossup
Was quickly turned into a rout
by a succession of Viking
turnovers, resulting from the
constant defensive pressure
applied by the Redken.
A strong and experienced
Augustana junior varsity
proved too much for the
Vikes, as they toppled the NP
cagers, 76-51. Frosh guard
Joe Majkowski enjoyed his
top performance to highlight
an otherwise unimpressive
night, as he popped in 17
points and contributed six
steals.
Williams' hot hand made it
a productive evening for the
Vikes' pair of guards, hitting
an even 50 per cent of his
shots from the floor for 14
points.
The Vikings are idle until
Saturday, when they host
highly-rated DePaul in a
prelude to the Millikin-NPC
varsity contest.
strong comeback in the
second period was not
enough to prevent Irvine's
74-64 win.
Gene Profit starred for the
Chicagoans, coming up with
22 points and 12 rebounds,
while Keith McDonald had 11
markers.
The Westmont tourney
opened with North Park
playing Biola College, the
Bible Institute of Los
Angeles. Shooting problems
in the first half again (30 per
cent from the floor) and a
total of only six trips to the
foul line against Biola's 13
spelled defeat in this one, by
a 59-55 count.
McDonald led the Viking
scorers with 15, Profit had 14
along with 17 rebounds, and
Bosko Djurickovic had 10, as
did Bob Geist.
To salvage anything at all
from the trip, the Vikings had
to beat Whitworth College in
the consolation game of the
tourney -- and beat them
they did, by a resounding
82-52 count. The effects of
the flu that had bothered
some team members were
gone by now, it seemed, and
the Vikes pulled away from a
40-28 halftime edge to bury
Whitworth.
McDonald had a game
high total of 26 markers,
while the Vikings defense
prevented a single opponent
from reaching double figures.
Profit canned 12 points and
Russ Hylen and Djurickovic
10 apiece in the romp, during
which NPC led by as many as
34 points.
The only things inflationary about it are the tires.
second 20 minutes nearly cost them the game.
After beating back one Wheaton charge, the Vikings moved
out to a 13-point lead before the fun began for the Crusaders.
Robin Cook scored eight of nine points in one stretch for
Wheaton, the last ones on a layup that pulled them within four
points at 71-67.
But Bosko Djurickovic countered Cook's efforts with a
last-gasp one-man show of his own, and he converted the
three closing free throws that iced the game for the home
team. He and Bob Geist shared team scoring honors with 16,
while McDonald chipped in with 14 and Profit had 12. Steve
Club and Cook of Wheaton surpassed any of them, though,
with 22 and 17 respectively.
In a rematch of a tense game played in Kenosha early in
December, Carthage's Redmen came into town looking for an
upset. It wasn't all their fault they didn't get it; they were
helped on their way to defeat by an incredible 68 per cent
shooting performance by the Vikes from the field in the first
half.
After blowing an early lead due to some turnovers, the
Vikings came roaring back from a 21-20 deficit to take a 44-27
halftime lead, scoring the half's last seven points. Still hot after
intermission, they also tallied the second half's first 12
markers, and Carthage was never heard from again.
Bob Geist led the way with 20 points; McDonald had 13, Earl
Dosey 12, and Djurickovic 11. All-league center Brian
Scheunemann had 18 for the losers.
Augie Alone Atop
CCIW Hoop Race
Convincing wins over both
Elmhurst and North Park last
week further strengthened
defending titlist Augustana's
stranglehold on first place in
College Conference of Illinois
and Wisconsin.
The week's activity left the
Rock Island Vikings with a
6-0 mark. Elmhurst's surpris-ing
Bluejays held down
second place at 4-1, knocking
of Illinois Wesleyan by four
points on Saturday to cement
themselves into that spot. In
third place, with losses to
only the top two squads, was
North Park at 3-2.
Claude White was the
league's early scoring leader
with a 32.0 average before
last week's action. He was a
transfer student that Elm-hurst
used to advantage in
creating a contender.
Seven-foot All-American
John Laing of Augie leads
the league in rebounding.
Last year's runnerup, Calvin
Saunders of Elmhurst, is
right up there with him, while
defending league champ
Steve Clum was lagging a bit
in the early going.
Augie's 12-1 mark is still
the best overall in the league,
a record with which the
Vikings stay in the national
wire-service rankings. North
Park's 10-4 and Elmhurst's
8-5 are the best of the rest.
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Augustana Unloads on Park 78-59
90 per cent from the line in
that first half to pull away
from NPC (43 and 67). Even
though the visiting Vikings
were outrebounding their
foes, the home team had
then on the ropes.
The second half was a
giant anticlimax. The Augie
lead soared as high as 21
poins at times, and even
though Laing and starting
guard Mark Brooks fouled
out it made little difference.
McDonald wound up as
the game's high scorer,
pumping in 19 points. Three
other North Parkers made
double figures — Geist with
13, Hargesheimer with 11,
and Bosko Djurickovic with
10 — but Profit was held to
four and Campbell shut out.
Menzer topped Augustana
with 18, 6-11 Bruce Hamming
had 15 markers and a
gme-high 11 rebounds, Laing
wound up with 14 points and
Drew Boster 11. The
Augustana boys made 14 of
16 free throws and shot 50
per cent from the floor, while
their guests managed just 11
of 21 foul shots and 40 per
cent from the field. NPC had
48 rebounds to Augie's 35.
Rock island — The first of
the basketball season's two
battles between the two
Viking teams of the CCIW
took place here last Saturday
on the home floor of the
Augustana Vikes, reputed to
be too big and too bad to be
had in this season's league
race.
Well, the North Park
Vikings discovered that John
Laing and his mates weren't
all they were cracked up to
be — but the home team was
still good enough to stick it to
the Chicagoans, 78-59.
The win raised Augie's
loop record to 6-0 and its
season mark to 12-1. The
Rock Island boys lead
second-place Elmhurst by a
game and a half in the CCIW
and third-place NPC by two
and a half, as the losers fell to
3-2 in league play and 10-4
overall.
The tone and outcome of
the game both seemed to be
pretty well determined by the
end of five minutes of play. Meanwhile, an ailing North
Augie jumped out to a quick Park team (Jim Campbell had
6-0 lead and had it up to 16-6 been in the hospital Friday,
before the crowd was settled and the flu had struck other
in the bleachers. cagers in varying degrees)
A scene from North Park's basketball game against Carthage.
Grapplers Look Tough
by Dave Larson
Last Thursday and Satur-day,
Coach Dick Mahoney
took what is proving to be a
powerful North Park wrestl-ing
team into a pair of tuneup
meets, and both time brought
his boys out winners.
After a long Christmas
layoff, during which the team
saw no action (they passed
up the Midlands Invitational
tournament), the Park grap-plers
made quick work of III.
Wesleyan at home on
Thursday night and then
disposed of Kalamazoo,
Concordia, and Lake Forest
up at Kalamazoo on Satur-day.
The Vikings scored 33, 25,
33, and 39 points against
Wesleyan's six, Kalamazoo's
nine, Concordia's 21, and
Lake Forest's nine respective-ly.
What makes this even
more impressive is that the
Park is forced to forfeit two
weight categories in every
meet.
Senior CCIW ace Bob
Davis found the going
strenuous, as he pulled out
three forfeits against one
"earned" victory. Brad Erick-son
at 134 won one by forfeit
while dropping three. Fresh-man
Mike Eremieff started his
collegiate wrestling career by
winning his three matches at
Kalamazoo, one by a pin.
Tom Mietus one three and
lost one over the stretch.
Joe Podaza, coming off
last year's knee injury
beautifully, won all four of his
matches last week. Jan
Jensen, also wrestling for the
first season in college, tacked
three wins against just one
loss onto his record. Ed Kress
put on quite an impressive
shown by pinning three
opponents and winning on a
decision in the final contest.
Heavyweight Steve Cerese
showed why he, too, is one
of the best in the conference
with four wins, two by fall.
This week, the wrestling
squad will travel to Elmhurst
tonight and take part in the
MacMurray Invitational meet
on Friday and Saturday. A
home meet with Carthage
follows on the 27th of this
month.
Nugent Is All-American
Yet another honor has been accorded North Park's star split
end Greg Nugent following the end of his record-setting Viking
football career. He was one of 22 players named late in
December to the Kodak Small College All-America Team, a
squad selected by balloting among the nation's small-college
coaches.
Nugent was one of three Illinois players named to the team,
the others being Augustana's defensive tackle Willie Van and
linebacker Mike Rogowski of Illinois Benedictine.
College division players for the team were nominated first by
coaches from within each of eight districts, then selected in
final balloting with the aid of statistics by coaches representing
all districts. Nugent was judged on the basis of his Illinois
collegiate record 2312 career passing yards and 158 catches to
be worthy of the honor.
Nugent was also named to the CCIW all-star team earlier in
December and received mention on several other post-season
lists of outstanding small-college players.
CCIW Standings, Results
CCIW STANDINGS
Thru Jan. 13
Augustana
Elmhurst
North Park
III. Wesleyan
Millikin
North Central
Carthage
Wheaton
Carroll
6
4
3
2
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
2
2
1
2
3
3
5
ALL GAMES
W L
12 1
10 4
4 2
8 5
7 5
6 6
4 8
1 6
2 11
Augustana
North Park
Millikin
Elmhurst
III. Wesleyan
North Central
Wheaton
Carthage
Carroll
CCIW RESULTS
NORTH PARK 74, Wheaton 67 Augustana 97, Elmhurst 71
Augustana 65, Wesleyan 52 Wheaton 100, Carroll 77
Elmhurst 84, Carthage 73 Augustana 78, NORTH PARK 59
NORTH PARK 92, Carthage 57 Elmhurst 74, Wesleyan 70
Wesleyan 82, Wheaton 79 North Central 77, Carroll 60
was further slowed down by
three personal foul calls on
Gene Profit in the first two
minutes. Freshman Dave
Hargesheimer spelled Camp-bell
frequently, but big Jim
also drew three first-half
fouls.
Things just never got
better once Augie was out
front by 10, as Mark Menzer
got hot and hit his first six
shots from the field. Bob
Geist and Keith McDonald
tried to keep the visitors in it
with 10 and nine points each
in the first half, but the score
at intermission was 45-30 in
favor of the big boys.
Singularly unimpressive in
the opening 20 minutes was
heralded seven-footer Laing.
The All-American, carrying
an average of 19 points and
10 rebounds per game,
managed only two field goals
and two rebounds in the
entire session, although six
free throws in seven attempts
— one more try from the
charity line than the whole
North Park team got in the
first half — helped swell his
point total.
but as a team, Augie shot
60 per cent from the field and
Perfect Marks for
Three IM Teams
Three unbeaten teams
remained in intramural
basketball play through the
end of last week, as Sunny's
Blues fell from the ranks of
the unbeaten with a one-point
loss at the hands of
defending league champ
Speed Kills.
Kills upped its record to 4-0
with the victory, clinched on
a pair of free throws with
under half a minute to go in
the game. The Pine Brothers
also have a 4-0 slate, while
the Surf City Squirrels are
3-0.
The 17-team loop will
continue play into February,
when the top eight teams will
qualify for the all-important
championship playoffs.
Standings going into
games of last Monday, Jan.
15:
Speed Kills
Pine Brothers
Surf City Squirrels
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F.M. Johnson Archives and Special Collections at North Park University, Chicago, Illinois -- All Rights Reserved. For permission to reproduce, distribute, or otherwise use this publication please email archives@northpark.edu.

THE
COVOLUME 53, NUMBER 12
NORTH PARK NORTH PARK COLLEGE LIBRARY ege news WEDNESDAY JANUARY 17 1973 CHICAGO ILLINOIS
A Resolution:
"We Are Morally
Against This"
by Steve Carr
Last week's Student Senate meetings, scheduled to discuss
the Honeywell Resolution and Mandate, drew a crowd of thirty
people, most of whom dispersed after that controversial bill
was dealt with.
The Resolution "condemns Honeywell, Inc., for gross acts
of corporate irresponsibility in its continued production of
barbaric anti-personnel weapons that are responsible for ever
increasing numbers of civilian casualties in South East Asia."
The Mandate said the SA would try to obtain the right to
Proxy for the school's 250 shares of stock, or buy a share
itself, to appear at a spring Minneapolis stockholders' meeting
and vote against the production of anti-personnel weapons.
Vice-President Lavieri told how he phoned Honeywell,
Where various communicants either denied or evaded whether
Honeywell still made these weapons. An anti-personnel bomb
is typically a canister that contains metal or plastic pellets. The
plastic pellets, when imbedded in the human body, can be
discovered only through expensive sonar-wave equipment;
they are also extremely difficult to remove surgically. "The
only purpose of this bomb is to be used against people,"
Lavieri told the Senate.
A variety of opinions about the Resolution were stated by
the Senators and the gallery, the latter breaking into applause
several times when anti-war sentiments were expressed.
One person questioned if the Senate should represent the
Political views of the studentry. Senator Scott Baltic said this
was a moral issue, not a political one: "We are morally against
this."
Do you want to be morally represented by the Senate? The
questioner asked his fellow gallery-members. "Yes, I want to
be morally represented," Tom Jacobs replied. He voted for SA
Officials precisely because he did not have the time for SA
Work and wanted able people to represent his views.
Some people felt the measure would be futile or it was
unfair to pick only on Honeywell. Senator Jarvis said that
attacking Honeywell was "going against the entire corporate
System of America."
"I don't feel a bit sorry for 'em," Tom Jacobs opined,
maintaining the peace movement should select targets as
Cesar Chavez had done in the labor movement.
One Senator, Charles Hoppe, had obviously not done his
home-work. Absent from the last Senate meeting, he asked a
number of questions that had been answered then: What is a
CBU (cluster bomb unit)? Does Honeywell have to place this
O n the voting agenda (It is already on.)? Why Honeywell, how
IS it connected with North Park (Honeywell is the only
Company that makes bobms from beginning to end.)?
When the final vote came, though, only Dwight, Nelson,
Jarvis, and Forsgren's proxy voted against the Mandate. The
Other Senators voted aye. A short burst of applause from the
audience greeted the vote.
The next bill on the agenda was the establishment of a trust
and scholarship fund. This would buy a stock portfolio, to be
Managed by the school's investment brokerage, from surplus
SA funds. The dividends would establish a scholarship for a
student from one of the Covenant Children's Homes.
There were some objections to this plan. SA Treasurer Dave
Dwight noted it could take ten or fifteen years on a blue-chip
stock to get sizeable returns. Bruce Newman felt it made more
ense to simply appropriate surplus money for the scholarship,
instead of tying up the funds of future SAs. The Senate
agreed, and killed the stock proposal.
The final bill was introduced by off-campus Senator Hoppe.
It suggested moving the evening Senate meetings to the
Morning.
Although it was an admitted inconvenience for off-campus
Senators to come to campus in the evenings, part of the bill's
Purpose was to "enhance the prospect of having more
,tudents turn out at the meetings." Senator Liljegren said
lack of interest," not time scheduling, was the problem there.
Vice-President Lavieri also remarked that the executive
Committee had explored time change possibilities, but there
Were too many class conflicts to allow them. (Lavieri is also
off-campus.)
The vote came. Pearson and Phillips abstained, and Baltic,
Hoppe, and Forsgren's proxy were in favor, but the nine nays
had it.
A Festival
of Faith
Next Monday, January 22,
marks the beginning of the
1973 Festival of Faith at
North Park College. The
Festival will center around
the theme, "Race, Religion,
and Other Relevancies,"
suggested by the Rev. James
Forbes, who is to be the chief
resource person for the week.
He and the five additional
resource persons who have
been invited to participate
will center their considera-tions
around two more
specific topics, "The Christ-ian
Attitude towards the
Racial Crisis," and "The
Ministry of the Holy Spirit."
"We have sensed an
interest in both these areas
on the part of the students
and faculty, and we will try to
talk about them both this
week," Chaplain Halleen
remarked about the topics
chosen. • • • We have
invited the other resource
persons on the basis of their
known interest or work in
these areas of study."
They are the Rev. misters
Ron Behm, Douglas Cedar-leaf,
Randolph Klassen, and
Dan Simmons. It is hoped
that a memeber of the
Fellowship of Christian Ath-letes
will also be able to take
part.
A special feature of this
year's Festival is the presence
of two members of the
touring company of the
Metropolitan Opera Com-pany,
Mr. Chris Lacona,
tenor, and Ms. Carole Powell,
soprano. They sing not only
operatic repertory, but orato-rio
and musical comedy, and
will present all three during
the week, in addition to
working with the opera
workshop and voice classes.
Special Bag Lunch Con-certs
on Tuesday and
Thursday are also planned.
They will be held in H-23 at
11:30, and there will be free
.bag lunches provided for all
on- or off-campus students
who attend.
The daily schedule during
Festival of Faith Week will
include 7:00 Bible Study
Breakfasts led by the team
members, Forums at 10:10
a.m. in the Gym Lounge, 10
p.m. discussions in the
Coffee House, and a series of
workshops at 3 p.m. led daily
by different team members.
Topics include "White Christ-ians
and Black Awareness"
(Ron Behm), "On Being
Creative Christians" (Randy
Klassen), "Christian Con-science
Today" (Doug Cedar-leaf),
and "Gifts of the Spirit"
(Randy Klassen and Dan
Simmons). Evening meetings
Monday, Wednesday, and
Thursday at 8:15 will have as
speaker the Rev. Forbes.
Mr. Forbes, a black
Pentecostal minister from
Richmond, Virginia, may be
(Cont'd. on page 4)
The Chamber Singers and their string accompaniment made a number of
appearances this year. One of them was at the school musicale, held Friday,
January 12.
Come To Alumni Day
North Park College's Alumni Association is inviting alumni,
friends, parents, students — everyone — to come to Alumni
Day on Saturday, January 20.
Besides eight mini-classes, many of them taught by
members of the college faculty, there will be periods for
socializing during the day, including the annual dinner at 5:30
p.m. with entertainment provided by two musical alumni
groups and a campus humorist.
The mini-classes are:
At 10:15 a.m. and 2:15 p.m., Mr. Athnos illuminates the
artistic and religious aspects of the work of Bach; Prof.
Hawkinson discusses "Mr. Kissinger's New Balance of
Power"; Mrs. Tinzmann bases a discussion on the book I'm
O.K., You're O.K.; and Dr. Philip Anderson, director of medical
education at Swedish Covenant Hospital, and Dr. Earl
Dahlstrom of the Seminary, will explore "Ethical Questions in
the Practice of Modern Medicine."
At 11:15 a.m. and 3:15 p.m. Dr. Edgren ponders "The Novel
and Film — Peril and Promise"; Lars-Birger Sponberg lectures
on painting, "All is Vanity — Religion and Art"; Craig Stewart
asks, "Exit Pollyanna, Enter Playmates — A Trend Toward
Pornography?"; and Mr. Wettersten discusses "The New
Archeology in Southern Illinois."
There is no charge for the classes. They will probably be
presented in Carlson Tower.
What else is happening for campus visitors? Coffee hour
and registration at 9:30 a.m. in the Campus Center; a 12;30
luncheon in the dining hall; an informal get-together in the
Campus Center lounge at 4:30; and the Alumni-sponsored
buffet dinner with entertainment at 5:30.
The day's schedule will conclude with a CCIW game
between North Park and Millikin University at 8:00 p.m. in the
gymnasium.
The North Park Wind Ensemble gets in its licks.
Page 2 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 17, 1973
New Films Scheduled
A new film series has been
slated to replace the series of
oldies — but goodies which
have been shown on campus
this year. The first attraction
in the new series comes this
weekend, January 19 and 20.
It is The Cheyenne Social
Club, a wild-west comedy
starring James Stewart as an
itinerant cowboy who has
just fallen heir to what he at
first thinks is a boarding
house, run by Shirley Jones.
He and his sidekick, Henry
Fonda, soon realize, however,
that what they thought was a
They make their own laws at "The Cheyenne Social Club"
ISTIONALSEIERAL MCIIP1S MINTS
JAMS STEWART
HENRY FONDA
THE CHEYENNE SOCIAL CWB
. . WHERE THE WEST WAS REALLY MADE ,
SHIRLEY JONES
SUE AM LANGDON
(Igadcpi ricsmikw,PAIMIONe
Fine Arts Commission Explodes
Well! I send in my tearful
resignation, and not a soul
whimpers. They accepted it
without a howdy-do. Thus I
have but one alternative to
soothe my feelings, and that
is to return! Yes indeed, this
is my Big Comeback. . .
Do you have any New
Year's resolutions? You must
know by now that one of
mine is: to become even
more indispensable. But there
are others, oh yes. For
example: Spread cheer with
the beer, or, if you must
drink, don't be a bum about
it, smile and be thankful that
you are all off-campus.
There is much happening
about town at the beginning
of the new year, observe: The
Old Town School of Folk
Music began a new series of
guitar and banjo classes and
various workshops the weejk
of the 2nd. Classes are
Monday thru Thursday eve-nings,
8-10:30 p.m., and
Saturdays from 1:30-4 p.m. If
you are meagrely interested
in such activities, why not
belatedly partake of the
festivities? Contact Gail Fors-
Sweden Shop
3313 Foster Ave.
IR 8-0327
Gifts and Cards
from Scandinavia
Mon./Thurs. 9:30-9
Other days 9:30-6
We pack, wrap, and mail
berg at the school, 525-7472,
for information and a
brochure. OK?
The Gallery Ensemble of
talented jazz musicians will
hold forth beginning at 9 p.m.
on Fridays, Saturdays, and
Sundays during the month of
January at the Afram Gallery
and Studio, 1037 East 75th
Street. For the past few years
the Ensemble has been
providing some of the city's
most innovative jazz at their
weekend sessions at the
Gallery. This January series is
called "Sudden Death" and
promises to be a spectacular
of the creative jazz scene.
With the Ensemble is poetry
read by contemporary poets
in the midst of a new art
display by local artists. To
visit this set is worth the trip,
the music is varied and "quite
mellow," as they say. A small
donation is asked at the door,
and coffee and fruit juice will
boarding house is a social
center of another kind.
Other features coming
soon are, A Man Called
Horse, with Richard Harris
and Dame Judith Anderson,
a one-night showing on
February 16; April Fools, a
comedy starring Jack Lem -
mon, on March 10; One Day
in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
on May 4; and, on May 12,
They Shoot Horses, Don't
They?
These films are current,
often critically acclaimed, and
very expensive to rent, as
high as $250 per showing for
some. Please consider these
films when planning your
weekends, because without
adequate attendance, losses
will cause cancellation of the
series.
0.111"Nk,s,
c
be available; any thing else,
bring your own.
At the Auditorium of
Northeastern University, the
National Theatre of the Deaf
is presenting "Gilgamesh,"
its production with an all new
program adapted and direct-ed
by Larry Arrick. Two-thirds
god and one-third man,
Gilgamesh defies his destiny
to quest after immortality;
this fantastic epic pre-dates
Homer by 1500 years and is
produced by these unusually
gifted and determined artists
in a powerful, provocative
and humorous interpretation.
-2cowNintharukee
Ate NosTa / smEandSCICC7704 / *
c * * cp Y 0 -j, 0
C)0 * 04/ *4j N/,- "1"1(-% * 4) 2
Walt Macuda
Politics Under
Glass
Convention '73 is nearly upon us but the backstage
machinations and maneuvers that were present last year are
noticeably absent this time around.
Last year, with three weeks left before the convention,
people had a pretty good idea of who was in the running for
the presidential nomination. Both John Liljegren and Ralph
Lavieri were openly active candidates with delegations forming
in their support. The "non-campaigner" Pete Heintzelman
went into the convention without any committeed delegations
yet at its finish, would up with the second highest vote total
and eventually went on with Lavieri to win the election over
the charismatic Liljegren.
There is a curse on this campus that goes, "He who admits
to desiring the presidency is bound to lose." More than one
person has started his campaign for the presidency the day he
set foot on the campus. Without exception their plans have
fallen by the wayside. Liljegren and Jim Ahlberg, who lost the
1971 election to Joyce Nelson, are the two most recent victims
of the curse.
This year's campus politicians are keeping their plans to
themselves. No one is willing to admit that he or she is
interested in the office of SA president.
But the reliable campus grapevine has come up with some
names of people who could be considered for the office. The
vine says that Liljegren may try again, denials notwithstanding.
Junior class senator Dave Pearson has also been mentioned.
But when asked about the possibility Pearson replied, "I don't
think I want to do it. I could do the job, but I don't think being
able is enough."
Social Services Commission co-chairman Mike Voight has
been rumored to be interested. When asked about the
presidency he answered, "I haven't made up my mind yet."
The list of hopefuls includes senators Lisa Bringerud, Chuck
Hoppe and Scott Baltic. Even Chief Justice Dave Danielson's
name has been bandied about.
But who is really running this year? For the campus
politicians, mum's the word.
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The show begins Monday
the 28th at 8 p.m. at
Northeastern's Auditorium at
Bryn Mawr and St. Louis.
Student admission I believe is
$1.50. More information is
but a phone call away:
JU3-4050, ext. 501.
I believe this is all for
today, children, see you.
Joan Hanke
FREE
CHECKING
ACCOUNTS
To All
North Park College
& Theological Seminary
Students, Faculty,
& Personnel
Present Checking Account Customers
Are Requested to Contact the Bank
for Transfer to FREE Account Status.
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Wednesday, January 17, 1973 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 3
Straight from The Shoulder:
"No Love Without
Understanding"
I wanted to write about football, to say a few light things
about attitudes toward the game and so on. But I can't. I
spent my Christmas at the point of nausea, in a sick, frustrated
rage that I haven't shaken off yet.
You see, while you and I were tearing red and gold ribbon
bows off expensive boxes, while we stood in our pews belting
out "Come All Ye Faithful," other things were happening.
Across the international dateline, where today is tomorrow,
children were. . . and are. . . dying. Not from hunger or
disease. . . acts of God, some call them. . . but from crushed
skulls, mangled limbs, and pierced vital organs. All last week,
while we skied, shopped downtown, and visited with friends,
other Lutherans, Presbyterians, Baptists and Methodists were
riding in the sky, dealing death. A fuzzy-cheeked lieutenant
thumbed a toggle switch that salvoed thirty thousand pounds
of steel-cased TNT onto the head of people in a city very
much like your own. Three hours later, he and his colleagues
would sing "Oh Little Town of Bethlehem" together, and think
of home and of God. Supposedly, the same God you and I
believe in. And even as you read these words, all this is
continuing, let us make that perfectly clear.
Why? Because of one man, who has never publicly said he
was wrong about anything. One man, born of the meekest and
mildest sect of the Christian community, who harbors within
himself and enmity so vicious and so blind that he does not
recoil or weep at the photograph of a little girl running down a
street, her flesh in shreds, her clothing aflame, the handiwork
of Americans.
Nixon is not entirely alone. He shares with his predecessor,
some of his generals, and some in the public, that perverted,
virility-doubting concept of manhood that propels the
Napoleons, George Pattons and John Waynes of the world.
But Nixon alone is the present epitome of this sickness. His
"Christmas present" to the world does not represent the
wishes of those forty percent of Americans who opposed him,
nor even of the vast majority of those who supported him —
their sons also continue to become pointless statistics. No, the
Christmas bombs represent only the twisted, ill-conceived
values of this one man with near-absolute power, and that
minority as dehumanized as he.
So what? How does all this affect you and I? Why in the
College News?
Well, if American extermination-bombing mixed with
Christmas carols doesn't sicken you, then you'd better believe
in God, because you're beyond any help except His. What can
you and I do, as Christians? First, you can carry the shameful
memory of Christmas 1972 in your heart always, wherever you
go, whatever you do. You can learn; for there is no love
without understanding.
It may well be, as my brother Steve Carr has written, that
there is something better than politics. Perhaps it is true that,
as someone wrote, "Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet
they grind exceedingly small." If so, Nixon and his ilk will have
their reward. But we are here, now, and politics will dictate
peace or war, life or death, for a long, long time to come. So,
take a history course, a political science course, a foreign
language or culture course, especially if you don't have to.
Study sociology and religion, even if you're an atheist.
Recognize the destructive power of any idea or belief that is
allowed to go unchallenged, unexamined. Know that any
conviction which calls for the deaths of human beings has no
identification with Jesus of Nazareth.
Go out into the world, armed as a nurse, teacher, doctor,
administrator or whatever, and if you live to be a hundred,
reflect back upon the obscenity that was Christmas, 1972, and
show men that this was not Christianity. Show them that this
was not America.
Tom Jacobs
coellege news
Published seven times a term during the school year at North Park
College, Foster and Kedzie, Chicago, Illinois 60625. Telephone num-bers
JU 8-7926 or JU 3-2750.
Signed articles indicate the opinions of their authors and do not
necessarily reflect the opinions of THE COLLEGE NEWS of North
Park College.
EDITORS: Steve Carr, Walt Macuda
NEWS EDITOR: Kris Ness
BUSINESS MANAGER: Tom Vikander
SPORTS EDITOR: Owen Youngman
SPORTS STAFF: Gordon Edes, Dave. Larson, Larry Swanson
ILLUSTRATOR: Joan Hanke
PHOTOGRAPHERS - Ann Anderson, Harry Christenson, Larry Foss,
Burt P. Johnson, Bruce Newman
FACULTY ADVISOR :Vernon VVettersten
Staff writers are considered contributing editorialists or reporters
Printed by SON'S TYPOGRAPHIC SERVICE, 7504 Churchill,
Morton Grove, Illinois 60053, (312) 966-4111.
Freedom . .
Freedom of the press.
The phrase is so trite, the concept so
hallowed.
Is it in danger?
If you think Presidential influence on Public
Broadcasting Corporation programming, the
jailing of reporters who refuse to expose their
sources, and news black-outs on American
journalists in South East Asia are dangerous,
then yes.
Maybe you don't care. If you want to be an
insurance salesman, or a taxi-cab driver, or a
housewife, it may not affect you that much.
But if you want to be a teacher, or a
student, or a pastor, or a writer, then you
should be concerned.
Not only about the press, but about civil
liberties in general.
I don't believe that fascists are attempting
to stifle all dissent in the country, that
politicos are trying to turn us all into mindless
robots, or even that such a movement could
b e successful. American is so large, there is
always an outpost of sanity somewhere inside
it.
I do believe that fascists with the power
and the will can do a lot of damage.
Some of that damage has already been
done.
Freedom of the press.
Freedom to do what?
Yes, it is often prejudiced. Richard Nixon to
the contrary, though, it is often prejudiced in
favor of the administration. Neither the
nation's publishers (who are overwhelmingly
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Republican) nor the nation's reporters and
columnists (who tend to be Democrats or
Independents) spared the foibles of George
McGovern in the last election. The liberal
press scarcely gave George and easier go of it
than it gave Tricky.
Yes, the press often errs. The failure of The
New York Times to publish its knowledge of
the coming Bay of Pigs invasion is a famous
instance of that.
Personally, I think the press has been giving
the government a soft time of it, compared to
what the government deserves.
That doesn't mean all reporters should be
Mike Roykos.
But all the errors and incompetencies are
balanced by the immense amount of good
any city newspaper can do.
If the Chicago dailies are found making
sweetheart deals with Mayor Daley, they are
also found exposing waste and corruption in
government.
The test of a newspaper is in its news
sections. That's where the freedom of the
press really matters. The editorial comment
on the Pentagon Papers wasn't nearly as
important as the publication of those Papers
on page one. This is a good instance of news
that verges on editorial, but is significant as
news.
The freedom of the press.
So long as we've got the latter, we need
the former.
Shafer Florists
Corner
Bryn Mawr & Kimball
478 6276
10% disCount to all North
Park Students and Faculty
Steve Carr
C. J. Kahman COrnelia 7-576E
Headquarters kr Collegiate
Jewelry
North Pork Jewelers
3240 Foster Ave.
Chicago, III. 60625
Watch, Clock and Jewelry
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Page 4 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 17, 1973
News Briefs
CVA Weekend
Remember when a winter weekend cost $16—$20, back in
your high school days? Well, for $9.50, Covenant Young
Adults is sponsoring a weekend on January 19 and 20 at
Covenant Harbor, in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. There will be
lots of fellowship, outdoor and indoor recreation (including ice
skating and tobogganing and volleyball, etc.), and as a special
feature, a square dance Saturday night.
We'll leave this Friday afternoon and return late Saturday
night, so . . How about a weekend off campus, out of
Chicago? Contact Jan Graham in Anderson Hall. The decision
to attend may be made as late as Friday morning.
Deadline
Applications for the Student Missionary Project must be
received by the Chaplain's Office before January 20th.
Students desiring to serve as short term missionaries for next
summer or the following year can obtain an application form
from Chaplain Halleen or his secretary. Previous student
missionaries have been sent to Ecuador, Japan, Zaire, Alaska,
and the Mountain Mission in Virginia.
Dr. Gustafson To Speak
Dr. James M. Gustafson will appear in the Distinguished
Visiting Alumni Scholars program on Thursday, February 8,
and Friday, February 9.
Dr. Gustafson, professor at the Divinity School of the
University of Chicago, has been called "one of the nation's
foremost experts in theological and social ethics." He will
begin his two day visit with a public lecture on Thursday
evening at 8:15, in L-1. On Friday morning, at 9:15, he will
address a College Convocation, using the topic "Moral and
Religious Implications of the New Genetics." Discussion
(informal!) will follow, then Dr. Gustafson will lecture in a
philosophy class, and share in an informal luncheon to which
religion and a panel discussxion in Nyvall Lounge at 2:15
Friday. An interdisciplinary panel of faculty members will
participate, with Dr. Gustafson as responder and reactor.
Kurt's Beauty Salon
(formerly Mr. Marty 's Coiffures)
.3244 W. Foster, Chicago 5:349100
Special Price for North Park Students
$ .50 off regular hairset price,
$1.00 off any v,.3:1: over $4.00
WITH NOR1H PARK ID
Tuesday---,aturday 9-5
Thursday and Fridav erening,s till 7 Pil
Meet your
first tape deck:
The choir, chorus, and wind ensemble, with conductor David Thorburn, in the finale of the campus musicale.
NP Forms Orchestra
The lack of a campus
orchestra to acquaint both
string and wind players with
orchestral literature and to
provide them with the
opportunity to work with the
other has been one of the
few holes in the North Park
music department over the
past few years.
But now, even that one
oversight has been corrected.
The College Orchestra, under
the direction of College Choir
conductor David L. Thorburn,
held its first rehearsal this
past Monday night and will
continue to rehearse every
Monday from here on in.
"Our main function,"
Thorburn said, "will be to
explore that orchestral litera-ture
which we find within our
grasp. Another function will
be to accompany other
campus musical groups for
major performances."
Ideally, said Thorburn, the
group will eventually have
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from 60-70 members; but for
right now, the conductor
considers procuring 50 play-ers
a "smashing success."
As of now, viola players
and cellists are in short
supply and the search is still
on to obtain several more.
Eleven violins of what will
hopefully be a 16-member
section are currently enrolled,
and a pair of contrabassists
are also on the roster.
The music currently listed
as among those hoped to be
in the repertoiie includes
Mozart's "Eine Kleine Nacht-musik"
for strings; a
symphony by Gluck; Schu-bert's
"Unfinished Sympho-ny"
and Brahms' 4th in e
minor; and contemporary
pieces by Hindemith and
Copland.
Festival of Faith Nears
(Cont'd. from page 1)
familiar to some students, as
he was the speaker at the
CYA annual meeting held at
Edgebrook Covenant Church
two years ago. Three of the
other resource persons are
Covenant pastors (Doug
Cedarleaf, Rochester, MMN;
Randy Klassen, Prairie Vil-lage,
KS — an artist, and
member of NP's Board of
Directors; and Dan Simmons,
Missoula, MT), and one, Ron
Merle Norman
Cosmetic Studio
Boutiques, Cosmetics,
Complexion Care
"Try before you buy"
Make your appointment for a
complimentary make-up lesson.
620 N. Michigan Ave.
Room 260, 642-9710
Daily 10-6, Sat. 10-5
Behm, is the white pastor of
a black Congregational
church on the South Side.
He is also co-author of the
book, Your God Is Too
White. All members of the
team were invited separately,
and will be working together
for the first time.
"These men have indicated
areas in which they would
feel qualified to participate in
class discussions," said
Chaplain Halleen this week.
"We are hoping people will
invite them into their
classrooms." These discus-sions
would be of a
somewhat specific nature,
with the resource person and
class confronting the problem
of making Christianity re-levant
in their own particular
field.
They made
their own laws at
"The Cheyenne Social Club'!..
no wonder everyone's
dying to get int
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Thank goodness some things
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And good things, like the 62 year old
Hollands Jewelers policy of returning your
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Lots of things have changed, too. For
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Wednesday, January 17, 1973 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 5
News
Brief
Applications for director of
the 1973 Homecoming should
be turned in by January 21.
The applications can be
submitted to Jim Oberg or
Mark Liljedahl in Burgh Hall,
and Candy Wickstrom in the
Commission Chairmen's of-fice
in the campus center.
The applications are avail-able
at the Campus Center
desk and in Carlson Towers.
This Week
In Sports
TONIGHT
Basketball
North Park at III. Wesleyan
Swimming
Rockford at North Park
Wrestling
Vikes Win Three at Home
Going into last Saturday's all-important clash at Augustana,
the basketball Vikings of Dan McCarrell had pushed their
record to 10-3 for the year and 3-1 in the CCIW with several
generally impressive showings.
The league wins were both played in the friendly confines of
the North Park gym. On Jan. 5, the Vikings survived a late
Wheaton rally to hang on and beat their arch -foes by a 74-67
count; and five days later, they pulverized Carthage 92-57.
The North Parkers came up with an even split in
non-conference games over the Christmas recess, beating the
College of Racine in another home contest, 80-59, and
dropping two of three on their California road trip (see
accompanying story).
The game with Racine, a last-minute warmup for the
Western swing, was like two games in itself. The visitors held
the upper hand by one point at halftime, 37-36, and if it hadn't
been for Keith McDonald's 15 points before intermission the
Racine boys would have run off and hid.
But McCarrell apparently stirred up the troops between
halves, since they came out and blew their opponents off by a
44-22 count in the second stanza. McDonald ended up as the
game's high scorer with 27; Gene Profit had 15, and big Jim
Campbell contributed 11 markers and 15 rebounds.
The first game of the new year was against Wheaton, and
the Vikings reversed the form of the Racine game in this one.
After moving out to a 40-29 lead at the half, sloppy play in the
North Park at Elmhurst
FRIDAY
Wrestling
North Park at MacMurray In-vitational
SATURDAY
Basketball
Millikin at North Park
Wrestling
North Park at MacMurray In-vitational
Swimming
Chicago Circle at North Park
TUESDAY
Basketball
Augustana at North Park
Swimming
North Park at George Williams
West Coast Trip
Hard on Cagers
This year's Christmas
basketball trip took the North
Park cagers to California to
take on some of the West
Coast's tougher quintets. The
Vikings concluded the three-game
swing with one win
and two defeats and third
place in the Westmont
Winter Classic in Santa
Barbara.
NPC opened with a game
against a major-college team,
the University of California at
Irvine. Poor shooting in the
first half lead to a 44-23 NPC
deficit at halftime, and a
Jayvees Still Searching
For Another Victory
by Gordon Edes
Victory continues to elude
the slump-ridden NPC junior
varsity Vikings. Despite oc-casional
spurts of fluid
five-man work, the yearling
Vikes dropped three league
decisions to Wheaton, Cart-hage,
and Augustana.
Not since the opening
Weeks of the season have
first-year coach Bill Knuckles'
Squad savored a much-need-ed
win.
Arch-rival Wheaton totally
dominated play in their
encounter with the home
representatives, outplaying
North Park at both ends of
the court en route to victory.
With Matt Parker respond-ing
with one of his finer
outputs of the season, NP
battled Carthage on virtually
even terms in the first half,
and appeared in command at
the outset of the second half.
But with sharpshooting
backcourt man Jim Williams
confined to the bench
because of foul trouble,
Carthage surged ahead with
the use of a devastatingly
effective fullcourt zone press.
What had been a tossup
Was quickly turned into a rout
by a succession of Viking
turnovers, resulting from the
constant defensive pressure
applied by the Redken.
A strong and experienced
Augustana junior varsity
proved too much for the
Vikes, as they toppled the NP
cagers, 76-51. Frosh guard
Joe Majkowski enjoyed his
top performance to highlight
an otherwise unimpressive
night, as he popped in 17
points and contributed six
steals.
Williams' hot hand made it
a productive evening for the
Vikes' pair of guards, hitting
an even 50 per cent of his
shots from the floor for 14
points.
The Vikings are idle until
Saturday, when they host
highly-rated DePaul in a
prelude to the Millikin-NPC
varsity contest.
strong comeback in the
second period was not
enough to prevent Irvine's
74-64 win.
Gene Profit starred for the
Chicagoans, coming up with
22 points and 12 rebounds,
while Keith McDonald had 11
markers.
The Westmont tourney
opened with North Park
playing Biola College, the
Bible Institute of Los
Angeles. Shooting problems
in the first half again (30 per
cent from the floor) and a
total of only six trips to the
foul line against Biola's 13
spelled defeat in this one, by
a 59-55 count.
McDonald led the Viking
scorers with 15, Profit had 14
along with 17 rebounds, and
Bosko Djurickovic had 10, as
did Bob Geist.
To salvage anything at all
from the trip, the Vikings had
to beat Whitworth College in
the consolation game of the
tourney -- and beat them
they did, by a resounding
82-52 count. The effects of
the flu that had bothered
some team members were
gone by now, it seemed, and
the Vikes pulled away from a
40-28 halftime edge to bury
Whitworth.
McDonald had a game
high total of 26 markers,
while the Vikings defense
prevented a single opponent
from reaching double figures.
Profit canned 12 points and
Russ Hylen and Djurickovic
10 apiece in the romp, during
which NPC led by as many as
34 points.
The only things inflationary about it are the tires.
second 20 minutes nearly cost them the game.
After beating back one Wheaton charge, the Vikings moved
out to a 13-point lead before the fun began for the Crusaders.
Robin Cook scored eight of nine points in one stretch for
Wheaton, the last ones on a layup that pulled them within four
points at 71-67.
But Bosko Djurickovic countered Cook's efforts with a
last-gasp one-man show of his own, and he converted the
three closing free throws that iced the game for the home
team. He and Bob Geist shared team scoring honors with 16,
while McDonald chipped in with 14 and Profit had 12. Steve
Club and Cook of Wheaton surpassed any of them, though,
with 22 and 17 respectively.
In a rematch of a tense game played in Kenosha early in
December, Carthage's Redmen came into town looking for an
upset. It wasn't all their fault they didn't get it; they were
helped on their way to defeat by an incredible 68 per cent
shooting performance by the Vikes from the field in the first
half.
After blowing an early lead due to some turnovers, the
Vikings came roaring back from a 21-20 deficit to take a 44-27
halftime lead, scoring the half's last seven points. Still hot after
intermission, they also tallied the second half's first 12
markers, and Carthage was never heard from again.
Bob Geist led the way with 20 points; McDonald had 13, Earl
Dosey 12, and Djurickovic 11. All-league center Brian
Scheunemann had 18 for the losers.
Augie Alone Atop
CCIW Hoop Race
Convincing wins over both
Elmhurst and North Park last
week further strengthened
defending titlist Augustana's
stranglehold on first place in
College Conference of Illinois
and Wisconsin.
The week's activity left the
Rock Island Vikings with a
6-0 mark. Elmhurst's surpris-ing
Bluejays held down
second place at 4-1, knocking
of Illinois Wesleyan by four
points on Saturday to cement
themselves into that spot. In
third place, with losses to
only the top two squads, was
North Park at 3-2.
Claude White was the
league's early scoring leader
with a 32.0 average before
last week's action. He was a
transfer student that Elm-hurst
used to advantage in
creating a contender.
Seven-foot All-American
John Laing of Augie leads
the league in rebounding.
Last year's runnerup, Calvin
Saunders of Elmhurst, is
right up there with him, while
defending league champ
Steve Clum was lagging a bit
in the early going.
Augie's 12-1 mark is still
the best overall in the league,
a record with which the
Vikings stay in the national
wire-service rankings. North
Park's 10-4 and Elmhurst's
8-5 are the best of the rest.
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Page 6 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 17, 1973
Augustana Unloads on Park 78-59
90 per cent from the line in
that first half to pull away
from NPC (43 and 67). Even
though the visiting Vikings
were outrebounding their
foes, the home team had
then on the ropes.
The second half was a
giant anticlimax. The Augie
lead soared as high as 21
poins at times, and even
though Laing and starting
guard Mark Brooks fouled
out it made little difference.
McDonald wound up as
the game's high scorer,
pumping in 19 points. Three
other North Parkers made
double figures — Geist with
13, Hargesheimer with 11,
and Bosko Djurickovic with
10 — but Profit was held to
four and Campbell shut out.
Menzer topped Augustana
with 18, 6-11 Bruce Hamming
had 15 markers and a
gme-high 11 rebounds, Laing
wound up with 14 points and
Drew Boster 11. The
Augustana boys made 14 of
16 free throws and shot 50
per cent from the floor, while
their guests managed just 11
of 21 foul shots and 40 per
cent from the field. NPC had
48 rebounds to Augie's 35.
Rock island — The first of
the basketball season's two
battles between the two
Viking teams of the CCIW
took place here last Saturday
on the home floor of the
Augustana Vikes, reputed to
be too big and too bad to be
had in this season's league
race.
Well, the North Park
Vikings discovered that John
Laing and his mates weren't
all they were cracked up to
be — but the home team was
still good enough to stick it to
the Chicagoans, 78-59.
The win raised Augie's
loop record to 6-0 and its
season mark to 12-1. The
Rock Island boys lead
second-place Elmhurst by a
game and a half in the CCIW
and third-place NPC by two
and a half, as the losers fell to
3-2 in league play and 10-4
overall.
The tone and outcome of
the game both seemed to be
pretty well determined by the
end of five minutes of play. Meanwhile, an ailing North
Augie jumped out to a quick Park team (Jim Campbell had
6-0 lead and had it up to 16-6 been in the hospital Friday,
before the crowd was settled and the flu had struck other
in the bleachers. cagers in varying degrees)
A scene from North Park's basketball game against Carthage.
Grapplers Look Tough
by Dave Larson
Last Thursday and Satur-day,
Coach Dick Mahoney
took what is proving to be a
powerful North Park wrestl-ing
team into a pair of tuneup
meets, and both time brought
his boys out winners.
After a long Christmas
layoff, during which the team
saw no action (they passed
up the Midlands Invitational
tournament), the Park grap-plers
made quick work of III.
Wesleyan at home on
Thursday night and then
disposed of Kalamazoo,
Concordia, and Lake Forest
up at Kalamazoo on Satur-day.
The Vikings scored 33, 25,
33, and 39 points against
Wesleyan's six, Kalamazoo's
nine, Concordia's 21, and
Lake Forest's nine respective-ly.
What makes this even
more impressive is that the
Park is forced to forfeit two
weight categories in every
meet.
Senior CCIW ace Bob
Davis found the going
strenuous, as he pulled out
three forfeits against one
"earned" victory. Brad Erick-son
at 134 won one by forfeit
while dropping three. Fresh-man
Mike Eremieff started his
collegiate wrestling career by
winning his three matches at
Kalamazoo, one by a pin.
Tom Mietus one three and
lost one over the stretch.
Joe Podaza, coming off
last year's knee injury
beautifully, won all four of his
matches last week. Jan
Jensen, also wrestling for the
first season in college, tacked
three wins against just one
loss onto his record. Ed Kress
put on quite an impressive
shown by pinning three
opponents and winning on a
decision in the final contest.
Heavyweight Steve Cerese
showed why he, too, is one
of the best in the conference
with four wins, two by fall.
This week, the wrestling
squad will travel to Elmhurst
tonight and take part in the
MacMurray Invitational meet
on Friday and Saturday. A
home meet with Carthage
follows on the 27th of this
month.
Nugent Is All-American
Yet another honor has been accorded North Park's star split
end Greg Nugent following the end of his record-setting Viking
football career. He was one of 22 players named late in
December to the Kodak Small College All-America Team, a
squad selected by balloting among the nation's small-college
coaches.
Nugent was one of three Illinois players named to the team,
the others being Augustana's defensive tackle Willie Van and
linebacker Mike Rogowski of Illinois Benedictine.
College division players for the team were nominated first by
coaches from within each of eight districts, then selected in
final balloting with the aid of statistics by coaches representing
all districts. Nugent was judged on the basis of his Illinois
collegiate record 2312 career passing yards and 158 catches to
be worthy of the honor.
Nugent was also named to the CCIW all-star team earlier in
December and received mention on several other post-season
lists of outstanding small-college players.
CCIW Standings, Results
CCIW STANDINGS
Thru Jan. 13
Augustana
Elmhurst
North Park
III. Wesleyan
Millikin
North Central
Carthage
Wheaton
Carroll
6
4
3
2
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
2
2
1
2
3
3
5
ALL GAMES
W L
12 1
10 4
4 2
8 5
7 5
6 6
4 8
1 6
2 11
Augustana
North Park
Millikin
Elmhurst
III. Wesleyan
North Central
Wheaton
Carthage
Carroll
CCIW RESULTS
NORTH PARK 74, Wheaton 67 Augustana 97, Elmhurst 71
Augustana 65, Wesleyan 52 Wheaton 100, Carroll 77
Elmhurst 84, Carthage 73 Augustana 78, NORTH PARK 59
NORTH PARK 92, Carthage 57 Elmhurst 74, Wesleyan 70
Wesleyan 82, Wheaton 79 North Central 77, Carroll 60
was further slowed down by
three personal foul calls on
Gene Profit in the first two
minutes. Freshman Dave
Hargesheimer spelled Camp-bell
frequently, but big Jim
also drew three first-half
fouls.
Things just never got
better once Augie was out
front by 10, as Mark Menzer
got hot and hit his first six
shots from the field. Bob
Geist and Keith McDonald
tried to keep the visitors in it
with 10 and nine points each
in the first half, but the score
at intermission was 45-30 in
favor of the big boys.
Singularly unimpressive in
the opening 20 minutes was
heralded seven-footer Laing.
The All-American, carrying
an average of 19 points and
10 rebounds per game,
managed only two field goals
and two rebounds in the
entire session, although six
free throws in seven attempts
— one more try from the
charity line than the whole
North Park team got in the
first half — helped swell his
point total.
but as a team, Augie shot
60 per cent from the field and
Perfect Marks for
Three IM Teams
Three unbeaten teams
remained in intramural
basketball play through the
end of last week, as Sunny's
Blues fell from the ranks of
the unbeaten with a one-point
loss at the hands of
defending league champ
Speed Kills.
Kills upped its record to 4-0
with the victory, clinched on
a pair of free throws with
under half a minute to go in
the game. The Pine Brothers
also have a 4-0 slate, while
the Surf City Squirrels are
3-0.
The 17-team loop will
continue play into February,
when the top eight teams will
qualify for the all-important
championship playoffs.
Standings going into
games of last Monday, Jan.
15:
Speed Kills
Pine Brothers
Surf City Squirrels
W L
4
4
3
Sunny's Blues 3 1
RSV 3 1
Stones 3 1
Tuborg 2 1
Pandemonium 2 2
Hilltrotters 2 2
2 2
Corhhuskies 2 2
Zacklies 1 3
SJ 'S 1 3
Chicago Tribune 0 2
Public Animals 0 4
Half-mooners 0 4
Lavender Fog 0 4
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